GLASNEVIN CEMETERY BEING a RECORD of IRELAND's Hcflqms DEAD in DUBLIN CITY and COUNTY ALSO V LACES of HISTORIC INTEREST

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GLASNEVIN CEMETERY BEING a RECORD of IRELAND's Hcflqms DEAD in DUBLIN CITY and COUNTY ALSO V LACES of HISTORIC INTEREST THE GLASNEVIN CEMETERY BEING A RECORD OF IRELAND'S HcflQMS DEAD IN DUBLIN CITY AND COUNTY ALSO V LACES OF HISTORIC INTEREST PRICE b|? NATIONAL GRAVES ASSOCIATION, 41 PARNELL SQUARE. FOREWORD The National Graves Association deserves praise and congratulations for its effort in making available this permanent record of Patriot Graves in and around Dub­ lin, and of the places where many met their deaths in the struggle for national liberty. It is to be hoped that this initial effort is the first instalment of what will be a permanent All-Ireland record. The work deserves the fullest support of all who wish the sacrifices made to be properly recorded, ‘ and it is certain to receive due recognition, not only in Ireland, but amongst our people abroad. I would appeal especially to Eepublicans to give this project their active support. While we profess a reverence for the names and memories of our heroes and martyrs, we sometimes fall short in giving positive evidence of this feeling, as is shown by neglect of many of their resting-places, or of the spots where they met their deaths at the hands of the enemy. Many of the graves of our National Dead are unmarked; some are only vaguely known, while others are entirely unknown. The graves of the soldiers of the Eepublic of Ireland, who gave their lives in recent times, are sometimes untended. Such neglect is contrary to the general belief which credits us with great reverence for our dead. This is a lapse from duty which the National Graves Association is seeking to have remedied. The care of the graves is a question of national honour. The day of National Commemoration—Easter Sunday—affords annually an appropriate occasion for this patriotic duty. In the past, when the ideals for which our patriots died appeared almost to have been abandoned, pil­ grimages to • their resting places were sources of in­ spiration, and occasions for re-kindling the spirit of neA tri-tiA t) “ bei-u ctnmne orra 5 0 b R A t CUunpeAR a nibneicRe 5 0 b n A c . ” — CAlcbrn til b-tlAbbACAltl. An t)cuicim 1 5cAt *00 bAoCnAib 5 Ae>^eAL 1T1 ^tbox) bA gnAt a I1A5A *00 C65AI11C os cionn a teAcc Agus a ii-AitmmeA(iA Agus a n-eAccA a CouneAx) 1 jjcunfme. t)A“6 truAn be 5AC n-Aon 50 beAnpAi “oe’n cseAn-nos Agus 50 mbeAb cuitfine 50 bnAt onnA saii xi’guibwg is “o’eAg An son SAomse na b-£hneAnn. A^c, peAC Corn puAn pAibbigteAC is cAimix> : is UonrhAine AbpAX) h a b~uAigeAmiA nA ha biAgA mxnu, Agns cA ptu ArhAm AmmneACA a tAn x>’An bAoCnAib beigte 1 rroeAntfiAX) AgAinn. ’SC cuspom An gCtmiAinn nA An pAibbige sm a beigeAS cne uAigeAnnA nA bAoCnAX) gjAePeAb a CuAnxiAC ahia6 Agus iax> a Xieisiu is a tfiAisiu in A n is com, Agus AmmneACA nA 1,aoC pern a Cun 1 gcmrhne AC-uAm x>o ^ACoeAbAib. UA An obAin sm A n siubAb AgAmti h ia t i cnevoirmx) gunAb e An nxmAbgAS e. XJCAnAtu—xwAbgAs nAisiuncA. Curo x>e ConAX!) h a b-oibne An beAbnAn so. lAnnAimiX) CAbAin is congnAtfi An ^AexleAbAib 1 bcneo is 50 mbeit) 1 nAn gcuiriAs iombAn nA h-oibne a CnioCnu, 1 x>cneo is 50 mbero cmrnne 50 bnAt An nA bAoCnAib a tug a n-AnAm A n son nA seAn-Ctnse— 6m e gAoPbAC Agus <5me &Aon. Smne, cbmixvmi tu\i$eAinu\ tu\ UvoCtuvt') gAet’teAl. freedom. Pearse, at the grave of O’Dollovan Rossa, in denunciation of the British, gave us the following memorable words: “ The fools, the fools, the fools, they have left us our Fenian Dead, and while Ireland holds these graves, Ireland unfree, shall never be at peace.” This heritage of the spirit of our great dead should be preserved to inspire the youth of to-day to push forward to the fulfilment of the unfinished task of breaking the connection with England, and establishing a united Republic. The sacrifices of our patriot dead will inspire our people to safeguard, when it is achieved, the national liberty, for which they so freely gave their lives. M. TWOMEY, Chief of Staff, Irish Republican Army. INTRODUCTION This little book is intended as an Index to the most outstanding among our National Graves in Dublin City and County. It is by no means a complete record, Which would run into several large volumes. While realizing that every man who suffereD for the Cause is equally Deserving of mention— the glorious rank anD file who bore the brunt of every fight— space forbiDs inclusion. The year 1932 also marks the Centenary of Glasnevin Cemetery. Though first secured through the efforts of O’Connell as a Catholic Burial Ground, Glasnevin is open to all denominations. The history of Ireland can be traced in the Graveyards and the Jailyards of the country. Here repose the victims of the hangman and the firing squad, of the arti­ ficial famines and the resulting pestilence. Near the old entrance at Glasnevin (see map) are in­ terred nearly a thousand victims of the Cholera Plague, 1832. In another plot, further to the right (see map) lie the victims of the Smallpox, 1872. In the year 1849, in the Curran Section (see map) 11,335 burials took place, deaths caused by cholera after the Great Famine. I am deeply indebted for valuable help and advice to Mr. J. W. O’Beirne, of the National Graves Committee, who first took me around the route in Glasnevin tra­ versed for so many years by the faithful “ Old Guard” ; to the untiring efforts of the Hon. Sec., Mr. Sean Fitz­ patrick, and to my husband, who made the maps for this book; and to Mr. Sean Goulding of the Republican Soldiers’ Memorial Committee, for unfailing kindness and help; and to Mr. Oscar Traynor, T.D., who was in charge of the Republican Forces in the Dublin area during some of the most intense fighting in 1920-1922. and to Frank Robbins, who was Section-Oommander in College of Surgeons, 1916, for particulars of I.C .A . men. As Ireland owes a debt of gratitude to Doctor Madden for his work in collecting the records of the United Irishmen, so Ireland also owes to Mr. J. J. 0 ’Kelly (“ Sceilg ” ) and J. J. Reynolds, the story of the 1916 men. They first collected details and published them in the “ Catholic Bulletin,” 1916. MARY DONNELLY. : PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF IRISH REPUBLIC 1916. P. H, PE ARSE T h o m a s J . C l a r k e J a m e s C o n n o l l y THOMAS MACDONAGH: E a m o n C e a n n t S e a n M a c D i a r m a d a J O S E P H P l u n k e t t TheJm ei-m os I the proved ones J ''And though Iheir father's fate he theirs, They only trod the way Shall others with trnr/h as faithful, Thai pathway tread, W hen light, <f yore, led some before, Till m km e ul, 0 Mother, dear of Mothers ! A n4 more will guide to day. * " ” of: A Nations Crown upon thy Dear Dark Head THE SEVEN SIGNATORIES OF THE PROCLAMATION OF THE REPUBLIC. THOMAS J. CLARKE. Born in England his parents were Irish. They later returned to Dungannon, where Tom was brought up and educated. He emigrated to America when nine­ teen years of age, and there joined the Clan na Gael. When the decision was taken to carry the war into the enemy’s camp in the ’eighties, Tom Clarke volun­ teered lor dangerous service. He was captured, tried and sentenced to penal servitude for life. He served 15 years and 9 months in England’s “ Living Hell,” the convict prison. He w'as released in 1898, and spent nine years in America, all the time giving of his best in the cause of Irish Freedom. With the fixed intention of organis­ ing a revolution, this intention he never lost sight of till it was brought to fruition in Easter, 1916. In 1907 he returned to Dublin, and all Nationalist Revolutionary Dublin soon became familiar with the little shop in Parnell Street (Gt. Britain Street, as it was then). He became Chairman and a Trustee of the Wolfe Tone Memorial Committee, and President of the Rossa Funeral Committee. He threw himself whole-heartedly into the Volunteer Movement; fought in the G.P.O., and by request of the other leaders, as recognition of his life-long devo­ tion to the Cause of Independence, he was the first to sign the Proclamation of the Republic. With dauntless unbroken spirit he faced the firing squad in Kilmainham Tail, on the 3 rd M ay, 1916, at the 10 NATIONAL GRAVES. PATRICK PEARSE, B.A., B.L., Commandant-General Irish Republican Army. Born in Dublin in the street which now bears his name. Educated in Christian Brothers’ Schools, West­ land Bow, and at Boyal University. President of the New Ireland Literary Society and an ardent Gaelic Leaguer. He founded at St. Enda’s a school for boys. Established first in old Cullenswood House, a house built on the ground, once known as the “ Bloody Eields, where the Clansmen of the 0 ’Byrnes and the O’Tooles annihilated the English. Pearse embodied the spirit-ideal of Irish Freedom; the doctrine of sacrifice and immolation for the re­ generation of a people.
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